06/11/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/10/2026 22:43
Oxfam warns Musk's imminent 'government-backed trillionaire' status marks "a dark day for democracy."
As Elon Musk's personal fortune is expected to surpass $1 trillion with tomorrow's SpaceX IPO, making him the world's first trillionaire, a new Oxfam analysis reveals Musk would be richer than the poorest 46% of the world population, or 3.8 billion people, combined. Hitting $1 trillion would mean Musk's wealth grew by over $550 billion over the past year, equivalent to an average rate of over $1 million per minute. According to Oxfam, such extreme concentrated wealth is symptomatic of decades of pro-billionaire politics that have allowed the ultra-rich to write economic rules in their favor.
"Elon Musk's rise to trillionaire status marks a new pinnacle of oligarchy and a dark day for democracy. But this moment of dramatically concentrated wealth was not inevitable. Musk will be a government-backed trillionaire whose fortune was fueled by an era of regressive public policy choices - decisions rigged by a tiny few to fuel their fortunes, and overwhelmingly supported by political leaders," said Nabil Ahmed, senior director of economic justice at Oxfam America.
Oxfam's analysis reveals the startling scale of a $1 trillion fortune:
"A trillion dollars in the hands of one man is incompatible not only with an affordable economy, but also with a healthy democracy. Economic inequality begets political inequality, and ordinary people bear the brunt while billionaires continue to write the rules for their own benefit," said Ahmed.
Oxfam estimates billionaires are over 4,000 times more likely to hold political office than ordinary people. The ultra-wealthy often use their influence to consolidate power and ownership in ways that can undermine democracy, and Elon Musk offered a prime example of this harmful dynamic even prior to becoming a trillionaire. Musk's ability to pour money into elections allowed him to use his wealth and power in ways that embody the corrosive effects of billionaire control:
"The new Gilded Age won't end itself. This is a trillion-dollar alarm bell that should wake governments up to the need to take action. Never has it been more urgent to curb the accumulation of extreme wealth - overhauling the economic policies that have created not just trillionaires, but billionaires and the obscene inequality we see today," said Ahmed.
Oxfam is urging governments to heed public demands to address the inequality emergency, including addressing extreme corporate and monopoly power, taxing the wealth of the ultra-rich, investing in public services, and a drastic upscale in actions to protect workers rights and increase wages.